

It works with Crossover, just hope they can port their changes one day.


It works with Crossover, just hope they can port their changes one day.


That limp mode is usually controlled by ‘BD PROCHOT’, it can be disabled, but check your sensors and make sure there isn’t something wrong before doing so.


Most of the setup guides I’ve seen, have a udev rule that runs nvidia-modprobe. Here’s one I just found.
Yeah it used to be broken for me too, I think only recently did it actually let me activate it. My university also uses Duo 2FA, and I activated it fine. But sometimes it doesn’t activate on the first try, you have to reopen office a few times.
Also it seems to only let you activate it, you can’t actually sign in with your account for online features yet.


Yeah and North Lakes makes no sense to be mentioned, especially when the ABS lists it’s population as 23k and there’s much bigger suburbs of Brisbane.
I wonder if the designer used an AI as their source?
I avoid O365 as much as possible, but when I need to, I do occasionally use it with Crossover and it seems to work. Activation was a little bit janky, but did work.
Crossover is a paid version of WINE, and the other apps I’ve seen mentioned run Windows in a VM and forward the apps through RDP. There are advantages to both approaches, but I prefer the efficiency of Crossover.
I think Windows actually disables hibernation on some computers now, but ‘Fast startup’ (the hibernate instead of shutdown feature) works independently from hibernation, so it’s definitely possible for it still to be enabled.
A lot of people just close the laptop lid or turn off the monitor thinking that’s rebooting. Or they shutdown thinking it’s better than restarting, but Windows’ default shutdown is more of a close all programs and hibernate, so it often doesn’t fix things.
While it’s still awful, I believe they donated hardware, not money.


My A770 doesn’t list VC-1 in vainfo, so I doubt it’s supported.
Intel gets around this by designing their cards with a DP to HDMI converter chip built in, perhaps that’s possible with external adaptors?
I’m not sure if this is the same issue, but one of my monitors had VRR supported on a NVIDIA card, but not on an Intel card. I ended up modifying the EDID to enable extd_timg and it’s been working fine since then. I wrote a blog post a while back here.


A lot of distros have the logos disabled in the kernel config too.


they are asking customers to shift to their WARP client instead.
I just use WARP, and just send plain text DNS over it to 1.1.1.1. I believe this is superior to DoT or DoH, because the client don’t have to do any sort of handshake for each request and everything still goes over UDP while still being encrypted. If it’s setup correctly, one.one.one.one/help will say you’re using DNS over WARP.
Actually I’ve got a weird setup where I’ve converted the WARP client to a wireguard profile and I run it on my router, but only route 1.1.1.2 and 1.0.0.2 through WARP. That way I can still traceroute 1.1.1.1 while debugging my network.


The botnet’s code probably doesn’t support IPv6.
Is there something about it that makes it more resilient to DDOS?
While archlinux.org doesn’t do this, you can have multiple A and AAAA records which can provide DNS based load balancing, and IPv6 is easier to do that with since you usually get allocated a whole prefix. Of course that only helps to distribute the load, if your internet connection is the bottleneck then it won’t help.
If you’re interested, the guy that made the original scale of the universe has a YouTube channel with some interesting stuff: https://youtube.com/user/carykh
also allow responses from any established connection
You shouldn’t need to as iptables is stateful, you would need to for stateless firewalls though.
You’d also need to open UDP 123 for NTP, I see that mistake a lot.


You can still have that script, but put it on the releases page. Git works best with actual source code and it doesn’t belong there. You should also add an extra script that generates one of those ‘compiled’ scripts to the git repo, so that people can do it themselves.
I can find the official Pi Pico for $3.50, I’m sure clones are cheaper than that.
The Prime Minister of Japan isn’t a President, so it shouldn’t be red if we’re being pedantic.